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  4. Relationships between dual-task related changes in stride velocity and stride time variability in healthy older adults
 
research article

Relationships between dual-task related changes in stride velocity and stride time variability in healthy older adults

Dubost, V.
•
Kressig, R. W.
•
Gonthier, R.
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2006
Human Movement Science

Dual-task related gait changes have been previously reported for healthy older adults, suggesting that gait control requires attention. Compared to balance control, the involvement of attention in the control of the rhythmic stepping mechanism, as reflected by stride time variability, is not well known. In particular, under dual-task, the relative contributions of a second, attention-demanding task and changes in walking speed remain unclear. Thus, the aims of this study were (1) to assess whether walking with a slow-selected speed or walking while performing an attention-demanding task affected stride time variability in a sample of healthy older participants, and (2) to establish whether stride time variability under dual-task conditions is related either to the decrease of walking speed or the simultaneous attention-demanding task, or to both. Forty-five healthy older participants performed four experimental conditions: (1) walking at a normal self-selected speed, (2) walking at a slow self-selected speed, (3) performing a verbal fluency task when sitting on a chair, and (4) performing the verbal fluency task while walking at self-selected walking speed. Gait parameters were recorded across 15 meters, using Physilog". Results showed a significant dual-task related decrease in mean values of stride velocity, as well as a significant increase in mean values and coefficients of variation of stride time. These dual-task related changes in stride time were explained by the simultaneous performance of the verbal fluency task, the decrease of gait speed and the variability between participants. Although a relationship exists between decreased walking speed and increased stride time variability, the dual-task related increase of stride time variability was also significantly associated with the attention-demanding task, suggesting some attentional control for the rhythmic stepping mechanism of walking in healthy older adults. (c) 2006 Published by Elsevier B.V.

  • Details
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Type
research article
DOI
10.1016/j.humov.2006.03.004
Web of Science ID

WOS:000238770600006

Author(s)
Dubost, V.
Kressig, R. W.
Gonthier, R.
Herrmann, F. R.
Aminian, K.  
Najafi, B.  
Beauchet, O.
Date Issued

2006

Published in
Human Movement Science
Volume

25

Issue

3

Start page

372

End page

382

Subjects

dual-task

•

stride variability

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walking speed

•

older adult

•

GAIT VARIABILITY

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COGNITIVE TASK

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ALZHEIMERS-DISEASE

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PARKINSON-DISEASE

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ATTENTION

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WALKING

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FALLS

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AGE

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LOCOMOTION

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PEOPLE

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LMAM  
Available on Infoscience
November 30, 2006
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/237215
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